Estimation of Vaccine Efficacy in Non‐Randomly Mixing Populations
DOI10.1002/BIMJ.4710370103zbMATH Open0837.62094OpenAlexW2167753260MaRDI QIDQ4865210FDOQ4865210
Authors: M. Elizabeth Halloran, Ira M. jun. Longini, Luc Watelet, Michael Haber
Publication date: 20 May 1996
Published in: Biometrical Journal (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/bimj.4710370103
Recommendations
- Estimation of vaccine efficacy from epidemics of acute infectious agents under vaccine-related heterogeneity
- Estimating vaccine effects on transmission of infection from household outbreak data
- Estimating vaccine efficacy from small outbreaks
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 866538
- The use of a mixture model for estimating vaccine efficacy
vaccinationinfectious diseasedeterministic modelproportional mixingtransmission probabilitiesheterogeneous, nonrandomly mixing populations
Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis (62P10) Epidemiology (92D30)
Cited In (10)
- Nonparametric inference for immune response thresholds of risk in vaccine studies
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- A Bayesian framework for estimating vaccine efficacy per infectious contact
- Estimating vaccine effects on transmission of infection from household outbreak data
- Discussion on “Estimating vaccine efficacy over time after a randomized study is unblinded” by Anastasios A. Tsiatis and Marie Davidian
- Estimation of effective vaccination rate: pertussis in New Zealand as a case study
- Estimating vaccine efficacy from small outbreaks
- Estimating Vaccine Efficacy From Secondary Attack Rates
- Efficiency of Estimating Vaccine Efficacy for Susceptibility and Infectiousness: Randomization by Individual Versus Household
- Statistical physics of vaccination
This page was built for publication: Estimation of Vaccine Efficacy in Non‐Randomly Mixing Populations
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q4865210)